Tuesday, Mrch 81, 1958 Tele-Vi EWS Radio-Television By DAVE BLACKMEE THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Eaton. Ortgo Pit II On Television KPTV (Channel 27) Television launched and guDnnrn i. i.. i in iU early years, now is standing on t ft.nd ...: it own wav. leet ana Vi"B - - - A license to operate a TV station no loneer i .. , the industry expressed it only three or four years -t license to lose money.'; 'e8rs g0' At the same time, television has not tjiiro '.. v W. out of the hand that fed tt,lStadMfldt Radio broadcasting still is taking in a, many dollarY m before, although showing less profit. - Many of the TV stations now going on the air break even or show a profit almost from the start, in contrast to the hardy pioneers who spent money like watc? , l 1949 for instance, 98 TV stations and the ideo networks lost more than 25 million dollars. The Federal Commission in a prelimary report estimates TV broad casting showed a net income in 1952 of 54U million dollars, before federal income taxes. Of the 108 stations on the air the full year, only 14 lost money The biggest factor in the changed situation is the tremendous increase in the number of sets in the hands of the public From less than 122,220 at the start of 1949 to an estimated 22 million now. That, in turn, was due to more and improved programs! and to sets with bigger picture at lower prices Five years ago you had to pay about 375 for a set with a picture tube 10 inches across. A vastly better set with with-a 17-inch picture tube now ean be bought for $200 or less. " Radio broadcasting has continued to increase its dollar volume of business, but has had to split it among more stations, im revenue irom local programs and spot com mercials had showed a slow but steady decline. . , . - " ' YOURS FOR THE TELEVIEWING (TUESDAY) Kate Smith Show at 1. The Easter Lily, by Brice How ard starring Berry Kroeger. Betty Furness at 2. John Robert Powers, country's out standing authority on feminine pulchritude, will be guest. Matinee Theater at 8. "It could Happen to You." Alan Baxter, Andrea Leeds. Fireside Theater at 9. "A Man of Peace." Ralph Faulk ner and Glase Lohman. Famous fencing master is taunt ed by atudent who yinks the old man is too cowardly to fight a championship match. . Circle Theater at 9 :80. "The Checkerboard Heart." Bet sy von Furstenberg, comedy of rebellious lovers. Ken Murray Show at 10. Leslie Caron as guest at "Hollywood and Vine." American Forum of the Air at 10:30. "Federal or State Tidelands Ownership," debate by Estes Kefauver (D., Tenn.) and Russel B. Long (D., La.). My Little Margie at 11. "Stock Control." Vern's gift of 100 shares of stock to his daughter proves to be the controlling factor in an important business deal. Nite Owl Theater at 11:30. "Frisco Waterfront." Ben Lyon, Rod LaRogue. TELEVISION INC and MARR RADIO Soltm's Moit Complete ' Television Center 2140S,Com'l Phone Day or Night Moll or 2-4728 FOR THE LOCAL CHAMPION TV BSD AT ' 11:1ft ft-m. Freedom RIdm 11:00 P.m. Thi Blf Pwoff ' ' " 11:)0 p.m. Wtieomc TriMlir , . 1:00 p.m. Kit Bralth - ' J:O0 p.m. Betty IMrnua 1:11 p.m. Arthur Qodfrtr 130 p.m. atilk It Him ,. 1:00 p.m. kittle ThuliT 4:15 p.m. A!rcb (or Tomoiro ' 4:30 p.m. Loft ot Lift (AO p.m. Howdy Doody 4:M p.m. Namu tha two 4:30 p.m. Dout Xdvftrda p.m. Tlmt for Biabt ' 1:00 p.m. Two for tha Monty 1:10 p.m. Dlofth abort 1:44 p.m Mtwi Caravta - 1:00 p.m. Ttxaco ThtaUrt 4:00 p.m. FlrtiHlt Thaattr 1:10 p.m. Clreit Ttaatttr . 10:00 p.m. Aim Young 10:30 p.m.-6eott Uuiio HU 11:00 p.m. Uy Little U.tHo 11:10 p.m. Nltt Owl Thttter 11:14 p.m. (Apptoi.) Hn Off Wednesday . 11:45 a.m. Oirry Uoort -li:00 p.m. Tha Blf Poyoff 13:30 p.m. Weleomt Trtvtltr 1:00 p.m. Kite Smith 1:00 p.m. Doublt or Nothing 1:30. p.m.-Atrlke It Rich . , 1:00 p.m. Uatlnft Tbetttr 4:14 p.m. fleircb for Tomorrow 4:30 p.m. Lovo of Lit 4:45 p.m. Peter Pan 1:00 p.m. Howdy Doody 4:10 p.m. Tootili Hlppodromi 6:00 p.m. 8tra It Rich . 4:30 p.m. Douc Xdwardi 4-48 p.m. Time for Beany 1:00 p.m. Plant 1:48 p.m. Newt Caravan 1:00 p.m. Hollywood Optnlni Miaht 1:30 p.m. Arthur Godfrey 0:00 p.m. X Married Joan 1:30 p.m. ThU It Your Ult 10:00 p.m. Kraft Theater 11:H p.m. M.rch of Time 11:30 p.m. Nite Owl Theater l!:lft p.m. (Appro.) 01tn Off i .4i -"Ik 'Be'"1 Happiness Lies Milk Price Differential Rapped by Merchants Portland VP) The Portland milk price store differential one cent off on two-quart pur chases which is to go in effect April 16, was criticized Mon day by the Oregon Food Mer chants Association. Howard McAnulty, secretary of the 1,000-member organiza tion, said that stores which grant the differential will have to cut their margin of profit from the present 2 cents to 1 cents. The differential, which would permit stores to sell two quarts of milk for one cent less than dairies charge for deliv ery, was approved last week by Burglar ,100, Dies in Home For Old Folk Leeds, England W Rob ert Woolrldge, 100, retired . burglar, died In an old peo ple's home Tuesday. He said en his 100th birthday last month he pent S3 yean in all the major jails in Britain and the United States. He last appeared before a court when he was 94 on a charge of attempted bur glary. He was let off on account of his age, and finally decided that crime does not pay. the State Board of Agriculture, McAnulty said the differen tial should have come out of the distributors' margin. Dis tributors, he said, could make it up with more efficient distri bution practices. But he said this plan was opposed by "in terests that want home delivery subsidized at the expense of store sales." He also criticized the board's decision to ask the Legislature for a milk control law amend ment to restore the. board's Dower to restrict distribution licenses. The Supreme Court recently said the board was act ing illegally in making such re strictioQS. The amendment which the board is seeking would "great ly increase the alarming trend toward monopoly" in the milk business, McAnulty said. Hey. Derbyista Here's the first place plaque YOU ean win in Salem's 19SS Soap Box Derby July 12 If you get, busy now and get that racer built. It is one of the prizes that go to the Salem champion in addition to the trip to the All-American Derby in Akron and a chance at one of five college scholarship prizes. This is the T. H. Keating plaque awarded by the general manager of the Chevrolet Motor Division of General Motors. "Old Number Seven," . the Original Soap Box Derby racing car, is featured in miniature atop a shining world. The Salem champ's name will be engraved on the bottom panel. . Christie Captured Near Scene of Six Murders Four Suspects All Released Burbank, Calif. (U.R) Four men arrested for questioning in connection with the murder of Mrs. Mabel Monahan last March 9 were released yester day because of insufficient evidence. They were Solly Davis, 46, W. A. Upshaw, 34, former aides of gambler Mickey Cohen; and Baxter Shorter, 43, and W. J. Allan, 37. A fifth man, John P. Wilde, SO, also a former Cohen aide, was released Saturday. ' The five were arrested last Thursday, Cop's Wife Just Didn't Understand . Texas City, Tex. (U.R) Mrs. John Allen, 23, woke np yes terday and found a strange 20-month-old baby in bed with her. A few minutes later her husband, a night policeman, arrived home and explained to his astounded wife he had found the baby wandering on the street half asleep so he brought it home and put it in bed for the night. DROUGHT IN CHINA Tokyo VP) Vast areas of China, Manchuria and Inner Mongolia are in the grip of a severe drought, the Commun ists' Peiping radio said Monday London VP) John Reginald Christie,, Britain's most hunt ed man, was taken quietly by. police Tuesday for questioning about the grisly Notting HiU murder house strangling ot six women and perhaps more. A crowd of 200 quickly ga thered outside the police sta tion in suburban Putney where Christie was escorted. - Scot land Yard officers hurriedly were called to direct .the questioning. Soap Box Race Films at Dallas Sure This Time Dallas It's "Off again, on again" with the soap box derby In Dallas; explains Russ Sanderlin, soap box derby chairman of the Junior Chamber of Commerce. With a blush coloring his face Sanderlin extends his apologies to all those who at tended Friday's meeting at the Chamber of Commerce' rooms. It seems that the program never developed, it had been arranged for next Friday in stead of last Friday. Definite assurances are given that next Friday, April t, ail will be in readiness. Films of last years derby will be shown, and represen tatives of business firms sponsoring entries will be there. The meeting will be held at $ p.m. and all inter ested persons, entrants and their parents are urged to at tend. It Is planned to hold the meeting at the Chamber of Commerce roms In Dallas City Hall. NEW ENVOY TO RUSSIA, WITH FAMILY The balding, 55-year-old clerk who disappeared just be. fore the women's bodies began coming to light last Tuesday was nabbed while strolling a quiet Putney street only live miles from the murder house in London's sleazy Notting Hill Gate district. . ' A strapping 43 -year-old po liceman, Thomas Ledger, was walking his beat along the Riv er Thames when he saw a man resembling Christie's well-publicized description. He stopped him and asked him to go to Putney police station. . Christie meekly agreed. "It was easy," Ledger told newsmen afterwards. The policeman wasnearly mobbett by reporters and pho tographers and had to retreat back into the police station. The finding of Christie end ed a week-long search which extended throughout England It was one of the greatest man. hunts in Scotland Yard's long history. The whole nation was stirred by the bizarre murders. Grim jokes were made about the claptrap murder house which so far has yielded up the re mains of six women. Costs only about serving! 8 Navy Can Fire Guided Missile From Sub Washington, VP) The Navy says it is now equipped to slip a submarine close to an enemy coast and launch from it a Sunday punch possibly atomic by guided missile at a target far inland. The Navy took some of the wraps off the "Regulus," its contribution to the up-to-date arsenal of pllotless missiles, and disclosed It had been operated successfully from a specially-equipped submarine. References to a "powerful warhead" were taken to mean Regulus could carry one of the new compact A-weapons. ATLEE HAS OPERATION London VP) Former Prime Minister Clement Attlee, 70, spent 'a comfortable night" fol lowing an appendicitis opera-, tlon Monday, a spokesman at St. Mary's hospital said Tuesday. Rump Session Will a loan up to $1500 Give You a mSH SWT? ClMin up bills . p.y Uim . . rtduee monthly paymtnts with AtMMf Io"u " .i n Hindi, monthly pay youH f .t prompt "j." Phn' frimdly onviiit loan, writ., com. in. Uaiu m 'rnltvr ,r l" NOW! Loons m $1500 Toko p to 24 kMRriis to rtHT IttTIM 'm runts re saw s- FINANCEXO.I Ground Floor, Ortfon Bid. 10S S. .HIGH VT., MLEM ' Phoiwi 2-24S4 Rti Doyle, YES MANager Um )00 mm by rVWMl Hnonct Co. 0 Morion County Induilriol looo Componl.l Art ol Ooon. Im m it l til tmwirfiM H ' W tin ' Legislators Lampooned At Third House Session Oregon's legislators saw themselves lampooned Monday night by lobbyists in a "Third House rump session" held In the House chamber. . Ex-State Sen. Cortis String er, Albany, playing the role of Gov. Paul L. Patterson, gave the opening message to the my thical lawmakers. He prom ised to "clean up the mess" left by ex-Gov. Douglas McKay, and asked for passage of a law to stop sex conversion. Then a huge blonde, narnled Christine and played by Bill Hedlund, the oil company lob byist, entered, announcing her arrival from Denmark. In falsetto and bass, Chris tine sang "Am I or Am I Not." The director of Oregon Tech nical Institute, played by State Veterans Director Hub taal feld, burst into the room, an nouncing he had lost his shirt. He was referring to the fact that the Senate refused to ap prove the OTI appropriation. Then he descended upon State Rep. Henry Semon the real one, Klamath Falls, chair man of the House Ways and Means committee. Saalfeld yanked off Semon's shirt be fore the howling audience of 800 persons. Circuit Judge Frank J. Lon ergan, Portland, former speak er of the House, played the part of Speaker Rudie Wll helm, Jr. . At the end, the Third House gave Gov. Patterson a crib bage board. Candy Clerk Admits Killing New York . Federal agents said today a pretty Ger man war bride found working at a movie theater candy coun ter here has confessed to the "kiss of death" slaying of her husband February, 2 at Niies, Calif. FBI men arrested Hildegard Garni Pelton, 32, last night and prepared to return her to California to stand trial for murder. They said she readily admitted pumping nine bullets into her ex-GI husband, Will lam Thomas" Pelton, 26, and leaving his body in an automo bile near Niies. Mrs. Pelton told the FBI she hitch-hiked across the country after the slaying and had been working for several weeks at the candy concession in a Broadway theater and living in a mldtown Manhattan hotel. . Pelton's bullet - punctured body draped, with a red loop rug, was found propped against the door of his car February 2 on a country road outside Niies. There was a lipstick im pression of a kiss on his forehead. Happiness Is hero and alwayi available to everyone, Theo dore Wallach of Chicago told a largo audience last pight in a Christian Science lecture. . The key to happiness is spir itual understanding, ho said. He described, this understand ing as the consistent' recogni tion of man's relationship to God which blesses and heals. . Mr. Wallach spoke under sponsorship of First Church ot Christ, Scientist in the Senior High School Auditorium where Mrs. Marjorle Chambers intro duced him. His subject was 'Christian Science: The Key to Happiness." One finds happiness by find ing out the truth about hlm-1 self, his real nature and char acter but this truth Is far different from external appear ances, he said. Mr. Wallach said the ordin ary material view of man and the universe is being doubted today by many natural scien tists and physicists. Some of them now conclude that mat ter is not the basic substance of all things, and that everything is basically mental. ' Christian Science goes even further, ho aaid. It holds that consciousness Is fundamen tal that by bringing our thinking Into lino with . the basic laws governing the uni verse, God's spiritual laws, we can bring good Into our expert. ence and overcome' evil. That brings happiness. The lecturer stressed that these ' basic laws are divine laws laws making available unlimited good to man, and ox. pressing the unchanging divine Principle, the origin or cause of all things. He said Principle is another name for God or the divine Mind. As set forth by Mr. Wallach, man in his .true nature and character expresses this Prin ciple and its laws. It Is by cor recting one's thinking accord' ingly that one can remove evil traits, bring to light his true immortal selfhood, and thus attain happiness. Explaining how happiness can be found according to Christian Science, Mr. Wallach Indicated the method Is by sys tematic and persistent correc tlon of individual thought to bring it into line with divine Truth. ' ' This Involves rejecting as fraudulent such thoughts as fear,, selfishness, discourage ment, resentment ' replacing them with Godlike thoughts and qualities such as love, un selfishness, courage and gener osity. Lasting happiness somes from obedience to well-de fined spiritual law, according to Mr. Wallach. "There is Principle of happiness and ex istence which you can apply In your own experience," he told the audience. "This Prin ciple is the divine Mind, God "Happiness is the natural, reasonable effect of spiritual understanding," he said; "We must cultivate a whole new outlook on existence based on spiritual values," said Mr. Wallach. By this means it is possible to develop the capa city, which he termed "spirit ual sense, to recognize and know the presence, power, law and goodness of God. With this spiritual sense, one is enabled to "reject a material sense of existence, to nullify every unlovely, ungodlike characteristic, trait, and de sire, to blot out fear and all the falsely educated beliefs in the reality of disease," he said, Charles Z. Bohlen and Mrs. Bohlen sit with their chil dren in the homo of Mrs. George Thayer, Mrs. Bohleos mother, in suburban Bryn Mawr near Philadelphia after ; Bohlen was cinf irmed by the senate as ambassador to Russia. The children are Charlea X, Jr, 6; Avis, IS; and Celestlne, 2. (AP Wirephoto) V Really, Scientists Know What They're Talking About ..''-'.:':' :U-''' By J.' HUGH NHIETT : A AitroMMr. BsUiuloa DtrUioa. Ontoa nuhir auutuo UM One of the perplexing prob lems confronting the present writer is how to deal kindly with the occasional correspond ent who considers the astrono mers are all wrong and that one who has had very little study in science and mathe matics has discovered the solu tion to the universal mysteries. The late Dr. E. B. Frost, the noted astronomer of Yerkes ob servatory, told how at the close of one of his public lectures a woman was heard to say, "I don't believe a word of itl They just don't know a thing about it!" , . ; .. . .r Few today take this extreme attitude. Multitudes who have had little opportunity to study the Intricate, methods used in determining the distances, mo tions, temperatures, and masses of the heavenly bodies, never theless believe that the scien tific discoveries are worthy of respect. Popular articles can state only the final conclusions and must omit the involved mathe matical calculations employed. Trained Investigators are in agreement on the methods used and believe that anyone with equal opportunity would reach the same conclusions had he the ability and willingness to go through the years of severe mental stress needed to master the subject involved. around the earth by measuring . the moon shadow of a post en . the same day that at Syeac, HO miles farther south, the noon'' sun shone entirely to the bot-' win or a oeep weu. . Today, the distances to the nearer celestial bodlas are measured by the trigonometri cal method employed by sur veyors In determining the dis tance to a far-away hill wnh out going there.- Far greater distances arc calculated by the . variation periods of the Ceph eid variable stars, by dynami-, cai metnoas ana wo apoctro . scopic intensities. : ' France and Canada Seek Trade Balance Ottawa VP) France and Can ada have agreed to set up I committee of experts to seek a "satisfactory balance of trade1 between the two countries. Formation of the committee was announced last night In a communique after a day of talks here by Canadian officials and a French delegation head ed by Premier Rene Mayer. 25th & Stalest. Phone 3-6997 Free Parking Ws fcuriirtH Oar Meat in Tall It lit Owllti Tony nd Dolph Vitttooie's id' (aiiiC)i'BJ,(22:I JaRM-n Jm . af aT II The mind of man has devised Ingenious ways for Inducing nature to divulge her myster ies. The Greek Aristarchus in the third century B. C. studied out a. method for calculating the distance to the moon by measuring the angle between the sun and the moon when the latter, seemed just half Illumi nated. ' About the same time Aretos thenes in Egypt determined fairly accurately the distance The spectroscope,' that an- ' alyzer ot light, tells us thero are hydrogen, iron, calelum, and many other elements in the sun and stars. It tells us '' that a certain very remote ' star Is approaching tat at ten miles per second;' that a galaxy is receding at 1000 ' ' miles per second. Gravitation al methods enable us to weigh the massive Jupiter. -,. . An : unassuming but truly scholarly woman once re marked to me: "The immen sity and order of the great universe are overwhelming' wonders. But more wonder ful still is. the mind of man, which has . discovered and comprehended ' these seem ingly unfathomable secrets of nature." ', I' . Rather, than ridicule the findings of those who " are toiling upwards in the night," some of us prefer the reverent attitude of the- great Kepler, who exclaimed, "O God, " I am thinking . thy , thoughts after thee." . ; Wildlife Service Asks for Funds Washington (AV-The Fish and Wildlife Service wants more money for its Oregon and Washington hatchery opera tions. Increases for eight hatch eries in the two states are pro posed in a breakdown supplied by the service of the House Ap propriations Committee. , In addition to operational in creases, the service has asked funds for the following main tenance work: , Entlat, $3,800, to repair and replace domestic water supply lines and repaint residences; Leavenworth, $5,100, to repair furnace in residence and drill new well for hatchery; Win- throp, 11,900, to repair dam, dike, fish rack and residences; and Yakima, $1,S00, to rebuild gantry crane at Sunnysidc screen. "OUR REPUTATION ":'is' , YOUR SECURITY" , '' thafs ' ' '' LARMER TRANSFER and ;' - STORAGE ' si .an is i VAN irtM tem pos THE BEST Of ,: HAULING l STORAGE V FUEL Dial 3-3131 or sea as at 89 N. Libarty JUST f OF! V0U "Your Majesty" SEDAN SIX BIG DBAWINGS $5,000.00 IN PRIZES CAPITOL SHOPPING CENTER FREE PARKING